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[JOSEFINA MORTEL v. ANACLETO F. ASPIRAS](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c36a6?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-9152, Dec 28, 1956 ]

JOSEFINA MORTEL v. ANACLETO F. ASPIRAS +

DECISION

100 Phil. 610

[ G.R. No. L-9152, December 28, 1956 ]

JOSEFINA MORTEL, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. ANACLETO F. ASPIRAS, AND CESAR ASFIRAS, DEFENDANTS AND APPELLEES.

D E C I S I O N

BENGZON, J.:

In October  1954 Josefina  Mortel  filed  in the  Manila court  of  first instance a  complaint against Anacleto F. Aspiras  and  Cesar Aspiras  (Civil Case No. 24414)  alleging substantially:

That posing as a bachelor Anacleto  courted her in 1952 in Romblon province, and  persuaded her to come to  Manila for their  wedding; that for  such purpose she arrived in the city, and  stayed in the house of her sister  in  Pasay, where Anacleto,  repeating his  assurances  of  marriage lived with her as her husband; that subsequently, heeding plaintiff's insistence on the wedding, Anacleto accompanied her to the  City Hall  to obtain  a marriage license; that there he  introduced his son  Cesar  to her  as  a nephew, and  then left them both in  the building, after  saying that Cesar already knew  what to do; that  with the help of Atty. Moises Espino  both  obtained  a marriage license; that several days later plaintiff was made to marry Cesar Aspiras in the presence of Anacleto, who led her to  believe she was really marrying  him thru Cesar  Aspiras as a proxy; that after such marriage ceremony she continued to live with Anacleto  as his wife never with  Cesar,  with whom she never had amorous relations; and that she had a baby born January 24, 1954 of defendant Anacleto Aspiras, who turned out to be  married to another woman. She asked  for annulment  of  her marriage to Cesar Aspiras, and  for judgment  requiring defendants to  pay her, jointly and severally, a  monthly allowance of P150.00 and damages  in  the total  sum of P72,580.00.

On  November 9,  1954 defendants filed a motion to dismiss on  two  grounds:  no  cause  of action, and  prior judgment in Civil Case No.  19115 of the same court.

On February 11, 1955, the court issued an order saying,
"Upon motion  of the defendants this case is dismissed it being a repetition of Civil Case No. 19115 (Josefina Mortel vs Anacleto Aspiras and  Cesar Aspiras) which was dismissed upon separate motions of the parties in the order of this Court of April 11, 1953."
The plaintiff moved for reconsideration, but her motion was denied in  a court resolution explaining that this case "is a reiteration substantially of  the  old case No. 19115" *  * * which  was  "dismissed  upon  separate  motions of both parties" and such "dismissal operates as an adjudication on the merits  in accordance with the provisions of Sec- 4, Rule 30 of the Rules  of Court".

Consequently the plaintiff appealed to this  Court  alleging error in the application of Rule 30 section 4, inasmuch as the matter  was  governed by sec. 1 of same Rule 30.

Civil Case No. 19115 was admittedly filed March 1953. The allegations of  the complaint  therein were practically the same  as those  in the present litigation; before  filing of the answer, plaintiff Josefina Mortel submitted on April 9,  1953 a motion to dismiss her complaint "stating that .she was in fact and  in truth married to  the  defendant Cesar Aspiras  and  that Anactieto F. Aspiras  participated in  the solemnization of the  marriage as father of Cesar Aspiras, and that she filed her  said complaint at the height of anger and thus the contents thereof did not represent her true sentiments"  (29 Record on Appeal).  It is also admitted that on April  1, 1953 the defendants  in said Civil Case No.  19115 presented a motion to dismiss, asserting the  plaintiff had no cause of action because she  "was a school  teacher, knew that she contracted marriage with Cesar Aspiras and there was no misrepresentation or fraud perpetrated against her."   (15, 29 Recdrd on Appeal.)

There is no question that on April 11, 1953 the court issued, in  said civil case, an order  stating, "upon separate motions of both parties the complaint is hereby dismissed".

For  the sake of clearness  the rules  cited by both sides are  quoted:
"SECTION  1. Dismissal by the plaintiff. An action may be dismissed by the plaintiff without  order of court by filing a notice of dismissal at any time before service of the answer. Unless otherwise stated in the notice, the dismissal is without prejudice, except that  * * *.

"SEC.  4. Effect of dismissal on other  grounds. Unless otherwise ordered by  the court, any dismissal not provided for in this rule, other than a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction, operates an adjudication  upon the merits."  (Rule  30, Rules of  Court.)
There is another section that may  be pertinent:
"SEC,  2. By order of the court. Except as provided in  the preceding section,  an action shall not be dismissed at the plaintiff's instance save upon order of the court  and  upon such  terms and conditions as the court deems proper.  *  *  *  Unless  otherwise specified in  the  order, a dismissal under  this paragraph  shall  be without prejudice.  *  *   *."
In the light of the above provisions, let us examine what transpired in  Civil Case No. 19115.  Before the  answer was  made, plaintiff filed a "Motion  to Withdraw  and/or Dismiss";  and she asked the court "that the complaint * *  * be withdrawn and/or  dismissed".  At first glance her  pleading does not fall exactly within the letter of the "notice" contemplated by Section 1.  In addition it asked for a court order of dismissal.

But if it does not fall under section  1, it may be considered as  a motion which the court could dispose of under section 2.  When acting under such section to court could consult the wishes  of the defendant.  The defendant may object; but the court may order dismissal, and such order is without prejudice.  Wherefore if the defendant agrees, the order is  a fortiori  also without prejudice.   Unless otherwise  expressly stated,  of  course.

Now then, the defendants' motion to dismiss in April 1953 could in legal contemplation be deemed  a conformity to plaintiff's motion to withdraw.  Therefore, the  court's order upon both motions should be without prejudice, under section 2.

On the other hand, viewing the pleading with liberality[a] and seeing thru the form to the substance, the plaintiffs "motion  to withdraw or dismiss"  of April 9  amounted practically to a "notice" of dismissal, before service of the answer, because it advised the defendants of plaintiff's desire to withdraw.  Its caption did not alter nor disguise its nature as  plaintiff's statement of her determination to drop  the matter.  It contemplated,  it is true, a court order of dismissal; but it was  not thereby  taken  out of the purview of section 1, since even after a "notice" given under said section, a court's order of dismissal would not be incongruous.  Defendant's conformity, if openly given, would  be surplusage, and would not modify the ensuing juridical situation.

As we see section 1, when the plaintiff files the  notice, the matter is dismissed without the necessity  of a court order; but a court order  may subsequently be entered definitely taking cognizance of the withdrawal and shelving the ezpediente,  without thereby throwing  the matter out of the scope of said section 1 (b).

Being  then of the opinion that the proceedings In  Civil Case No. 19115 could be classified either under section 1 or under section 2, we cannot but declare  section 4 to be inapplicable.   In other words, we hold the dismissal to be without prejudice.  At most, defendants may contend that the order of April 11,  1953 was also an  order sustaining their motion to dismiss for lack of cause of action, such order barring^ subsequent litigation.  In fact such was their contention in the court below,   (p.  27 Record on Appeal.) However, we do not believe that the court's order meant to declare that plaintiff had no cause of action.  It did not say, "for the reasons stated in defendant's motion" the case is dismissed.  It merely stated "upon separate motions of both parties the complaint is dismissed" which ordinarily could mean "since both parties ask for dismissal, the case is dismissed".  In all probability the  court did not stop to consider the merits of the controversy"  Indeed it would be a debatable point whether the court could still properly delve into the merits of the case after plaintiff had with drawn.[b]

Anyway, even granting that the court's order also held that no cause of action  existed, the situation would be one wherein the order was  both provisional and final in character (if that is legally possible).   Then  it would not  be fair  to apply such finality  to plaintiff,  since she would thereby be forever barred from submitting her  claim  to the courts, although she had reasons to believe the  order was  a provisional dismissal.  On  the  other hand,  considering the order as provisional, defendants would not  be unduly prejudiced  nor definitely harmed, because they are not  deprived of the opportunity to  defend themselves. Defendants should have insisted either that the court make a specific ruling upon their  motion  or that the dismissal be expressly made with prejudice.

It may be stated in this connection that we are all the more inclined to permit this new  litigation, because  in another expediente we  have just decided, (of which we may take judicial notice) (Adm. Case No. 154, Mortel vs. Aspiras), evidence has been introduced indicating that the plaintiff's motion for dismissal had been prepared at the request of defendant Anacleto Aspiras who promised plaintiff full support, and that there is prima facie merit to her claims for annulment and damages.

This is verily one instance requiring liberal construction of the Rules for the purpose of  assisting the parties to obtain just, speedy and inexpensive determination of their controversies without regard to technical objections that do not square with the ends of justice.

The  appealed order  is  hereby reversed  and  the case remanded to the lower court for further proceedings.

Paras, C.  J., Padilla,  Bautista  Angelo, Labrador, Concepcion, Reyes, J. B. L., Endencia, and Felix, JJ., concur.



[a] Pleadings to be liberally construed.  Sec. 17 Rule 15.
[b] It might be argued that under section 1 the notice automatically dismissed the case "without prejudice" and the order of the court was  a  surplusage,  in no way construable  as  implying dismissal with prejudice.

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